Samsung Galaxy Note GT-N8010 10.1in WiFi 16GB
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Galaxy Note 10.1 Review
I have been trying to convince myself for some time now that I could replace my laptop with a tablet. I tried this when the iPad 2 was released, but I quickly realized that the iPad and various other tablets were not up to the task at that time.- The S-Pen is unique and fun to use
- Cheap plastic construction
- laggy
- inconsistent user experience
Five Stars
Very good tablet but gets slow in kitkat version but still very good
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 review
The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 is an Android tablet that can be used with a stylus as well as with your fingers. This seems a little old-fashioned, but the stylus can be useful for taking notes, drawing and other tasks.
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 review
When Samsung launched the original Galaxy Note last year, the unique phone/tablet hybrid won us over with its great multimedia abilities. The huge 5.3-inch screen made it completely impractical as a phone, however, so Samsung has opted to ditch phone functionality for its successor and instead...
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 review: Second time lucky
The Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 is a tablet like no other but instead of making a big splash it's busy making up for lost time. With its launch pushed back shortly after the unveiling, Samsung's top-of-the-line tablet returns to a market that isn't what it used to be.- 10.1" 16M-color PLS TFT capacitive touchscreen of WXGA resolution (1280 x 800 pixels
- 1.4 GHz quad-core Cortex-A9 CPU
- Mali-400MP GPU
- Exynos 4 Quad chipset
- 2GB of RAM
- Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich with TouchWiz UX UI
- S Pen input with well-designed gestures
- One of a kind split-screen
- Below-par screen resolution for the class
- Proprietary 30-pin connector for charging and connectivity
- No Full-HD and poor 720p video recording
- Poor outdoors visibility
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 review: Testing the stylus-toting tablet
Samsung's Galaxy Note 10.1 is an underwhelming tablet with a standout stylus. The ultimate question is whether the stylus alone is enough to outweigh the device's significant shortcomings.- Excellent stylus-based drawing and markup capabilities
- good battery life
- support for external storage
- better-than-average speakers
- Cheap-feeling, plasticky build
- disappointing display
- inconsistent performance
- bloated interface based on dated version of Android
- requires separate accessories for USB or HDMI connectivity
The Samsung Galaxy Note smartphone-slash-tablet-but-probably-smartphone was made remarkable mostly by virtue of its massive, 5.3-inch screen. The Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet, on the other hand, is rather unremarkable at first glance.
Good ideas, middling execution: the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 reviewed
Smartphones and tablets with touchscreens have succeeded in no small part because of their simplicity. Things like memory management and multiple layered windows were removed from the equation and replaced with fullscreen applications that allowed for only minimal background activity.- Speedy internals and lots of RAM
- S Pen is comfortable and responsive
- Mini apps and Multiscreen mode are good ideas
- but they're limited by the small number of available apps
- Good battery life
- Front-facing speakers
- Lack of Jelly Bean leads to intermittent jerkiness despite the hardware
- Bright screen with good colors and viewing angles is marred by a low resolution for this price range
- S Note is promising but unstable
- especially in handwriting recognition mode
- Middling cameras
- Lack of NFC
- Cheap
- flexible
Review Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 (GT-N8010) Tablet
Samsung has always offered something special with its Galaxy Note series of tablets and we expected the same to be true for the Galaxy Note 10.1. Nonetheless, the exceptionally good performance of the 10.1-inch tablet surprised us.- - Good manufacturing quality
- - High contrast display
- - Very high performance
- - Good accessories
- - Interesting additional features
- - 50 GB Dropbox storage
- - 3G version optional
- That Samsung opted for a self-made processor that makes the combined Tegra 3 competition appear obsolete
- - Only 16 GBs internal memory
- - HDMI only via adapter
- - Not very bright display
- - Mediocre speakers
- The display could be a bit brighter
- and more internal memory could also certainly be put to good use
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 Review: Supersize Me
Does size really matter? Is bigger really better? When the Galaxy Note phablet (eugh) first hit the market, everyone started scratching their heads. ‘ Whatever will we do with such an enormous, category-straddling device? ‘ ‘ Wouldn't this S-Pen stylus concept do better in a tablet? ‘, they asked.